|
Birth Name: |
Nicole Mary Kidman |
|
Birth Date: |
June 20, 1967 |
|
Birth Place: |
Honolulu, Hawaii,
USA |
|
Height: |
5' 10½ |
|
Sex: |
F |
|
Nationality: |
Australian |
|
Profession: |
actress, producer |
|
Education: |
St Martin's Youth Theater in
Melbourne, Australia |
|
|
Australian Theater for Young
People in Sydney, Australia |
|
|
Philip Street Theater in
Australia (majored in Voice, Production and Theater History) |
|
Husband/Wife: |
Keith Urban (country musician;
met in January 2005; engaged on May 17, 2006; married on
June 25, 2006), Tom Cruise (actor; married on December 24,
1990; separated since December 2000; filed for divorced on
February 7, 2001; divorced on August 8, 2001) |
|
Relationship: |
Stephen Bing (producer;
reportedly dating in November 2004), Lenny Kravitz
(musician; dated in 2003), Fabrizio Lombardo (Italian;
producer) |
|
Father: |
Dr. Anthony David Kidman
(author; biochemist; clinical psychologist) |
|
Mother: |
Janelle Ann Kidman (educator;
nurse) |
|
Sister: |
Antonia Kidman (an entertainment
reporter; born in 1970) |
|
Son: |
Connor Anthony Kidman Cruise
(born on January 17, 1995; adopted) |
|
Daughter: |
Sunday Rose Kidman Urban (born
on July 7, 2008; father: Keith Urban), Isabella Jane Kidman
Cruise (born on December 22, 1992; adopted) |
|
Claim to fame: |
as Dr. Claire Lewicki in Tony
Scott's Days of Thunder (1990) |
|
It's a mark of Australia's cultural
strength that they've provided so many of today's top-line cinematic
greats. Aside from the obvious Mel Gibson and Cate Blanchett, there's
also the less well-known yet hugely talented likes of Judy Davis and
Naomi Watts as well as a couple of New Zealanders who made it in
Aussie productions. Step forward, Sam Neill and Russell Crowe. And, of
course, there's the woman who, Gibson aside, is the hottest of the
lot, the ex-Mrs Cruise but a fine actress and Oscar-winner in her own
right - Nicole Kidman.
Strangely, given what most people know of her, Nicole is not a fair
dinkum Aussie at all, actually being born on Honolulu, Hawaii (on the
20th of June, 1967), and holding dual US and Australian citizenship.
Her father, Anthony, a biochemist and clinical psychologist, had moved
to the island with his wife Janelle to work on a research project.
Almost as soon as Nicole appeared (she'd be closely followed by
sister, Antonia), Anthony's work with breast cancer took the family to
Washington DC for three years. It was only then that the girl who
would be known as one of Australia's prime exports began life on
Antipodean soil, when the Kidmans moved back to the posh Longueville
district of Sydney (coincidentally, one of Nicole's most renowned
relatives was also named Sydney - he was a cattle baron).
Nicole was an active, artistic child, and focused from an absurdly
young age. She began taking ballet lessons at 3, moving onto mime at 8
and drama at 10. Her first public role was at 6, as a loud sheep in
her elementary school's Christmas pageant. She grew up fast. Janelle
was an active feminist and Anthony a labour advocate, both of them
discussing the issues of the day with their kids over dinner and
having them hand out pamphlets on the street.
When it came to acting, Nicole possessed the same intensity as her
future husband. She was always seen as an outsider - she was known as
Storky due to her peculiar height (she fast reached a whopping 5' 11")
- and, as she approached her teens she departed even further from her
peers. While the other girls were down the beach, eyeing up the boys,
Nicole spent her weekends at the Philip Street Theatre, watching,
learning. She had her sights set on higher things - as you'd expect
from someone whose influences include Jane Fonda, Vanessa Redgrave
and, above all, Katherine Hepburn - and, indeed, she had her first
kiss onstage in Frank Wedekind's Spring Awakening. As the play
concerned sexual repression in the late 1800's, it was something of a
wild one too, Nicole having to yell "Beat me! Harder! Harder!" each
night. More impressive than a clumsy fumble under the pier, eh?
Come the age of 14, things started to move. As a sign of events to
come, one night Nicole received a note of congratulations and
encouragement from an audience member, a film student who invited
Nicole to appear in her examination short. Nicole turned it down, as
it conflicted with her own school exams. Shame, for the student was
Jane Campion, later to direct The Piano and then the Kidman-starring
Portrait Of A Lady.
Then the real roles began to appear. There were a couple of TV parts,
and then a sudden success. Kidman's film debut was in Bush Christmas,
about a poor family relying on their racehorse to make their fortune
in a race on New Year's Day. Unfortunately, the horse is stolen and
the kids, with the help of a friendly aborigine, have to track it
down. The movie was a big hit, and would become a festive favourite in
Oz.
As Nicole continued her education at the Australian Theatre For Young
People in Sydney (to which she'd later donate $100,000), and the St
Martin's Youth Theatre in Melbourne (her studies concentrated on
voice, production and theatre history), the parts kept coming. She
appeared as a High School track star learning there's more to life
than athletics in the TV series Winners, on film in the amusing romp
BMX Bandits, and in a video for Pat Wilson's Bop Girl. Then, at 17,
there was a Disney production, the TV serial Five Mile Creek, a
family-orientated affair about the wild Aussie West. Shooting five
days a week for seven months, this allowed Kidman to gain vital
confidence before the camera.
Now there was a blow, as Janelle was diagnosed with cancer. Nicole
took time off to take a massage course in order to give her mum
physical therapy. Her family's efforts helped bring about Janelle's
recovery. Back at work, Nicole scored five parts in quick succession,
including Wills & Burke, a lampoon of historical epics, the futuristic
Nightmaster, and Windrider, about a kid who builds a hi-tech surfboard
in order to snatch the World Championship, then falls in love with
Nicole. Tough break. Kidman herself fell in love on Windrider - with
actor Tom Burlinson, who she'd see for three years (she'd later date
another actor, Marcus Graham).
Next came the breakthrough. Kidman won a meaty role in the miniseries
Vietnam as a gawky Sixties schoolgirl protestor who evolves into a
freethinking Seventies activist, the series covering the activities of
Aussie troops in Vietnam (many of them social and seedy) as well as
the public and political furore back home. In the meantime, Kidman
found her own flat, cooking and cleaning for herself for the first
time. The series was produced by the Kennedy-Miller partnership, who'd
broken big with Mad Max, and was written by Terry Hayes, who'd penned
Mad Max 2 and 3. Hayes in particular was captivated by Kidman's
performance, especially a scene where Kidman is on a radio show,
complaining about conscription, when her brother, a returning vet,
calls in, causing her to break down. Kidman herself was impressed -
now was when she really decided to become a career actress.
So moved was Hayes that, apparently, he was inspired to dive into a
new project, an adaptation of Dead Calm. This had begun life as a
Charles Williams novel in 1963. It had been picked up by Orson Welles
who, in 1969, attempted to film it (as The Deep) with Laurence Harvey
and Jeanne Moreau. But Harvey died while on location so the project
was shelved, with Welles' widow refusing to sell the rights to any
Hollywood studio as she believed they had treated her late husband so
shabbily. Eventually, she sold to Kennedy-Miller, and they brought in
Hayes. Initially, thoughts were of hiring Sigourney Weaver or Debra
Winger for the part of Sam Neill's wife, held hostage aboard a yacht
by a psychotic Billy Zane. But Hayes kept banging on about Kidman and,
despite the fact that the character was supposed to be 30+ and Nicole
was but 19, director Phillip Noyce (later to helm Patriot Games and
The Bone Collector) relented.
Kidman threw herself into the part, arriving on location a month
before shooting in order to learn how to sail the 80-foot yacht. She
studied posture and voice techniques to appear older, and met mothers
who, like her character, had lost children. Then production began,
with the team spending three months at work, mostly at sea off the
Great Barrier Reef. On shore breaks, Nicole would take Neill to the
local rough-house night-club, wowing him with the freaky dances she'd
learned for Vietnam.
Dead Calm did it for Nicole. Vietnam had won her an Australian Film
Institute Award and an American agent and now there something
genuinely meaty to work with. While at a film festival in Japan,
Nicole received a call from Tom Cruise's people, asking her to come
talk about his next project, Days Of Thunder, to be directed by Tony
Scott. She had been to America for roles before, believed there was no
real hope but, hey, it was a free trip to LA. Meeting Cruise and his
people in a hotel conference room, she was embarrassed by the way she
towered over the megastar. Now she was convinced she'd be sent on her
way. But the next day she was informed she was in. And the height
problem? "It doesn't bother Tom, so it doesn't bother us".
So, Nicole spent 5 months down in Daytona Beach as Dr Claire Lewicki,
the medic who patches up Cruise's near-dead racing driver and sets him
on his way to eventual glory. And there was plenty of media interest.
Rumours of an affair were rife, fuelled by the fact that Cruise's
divorce from Mimi Rogers came through a couple of weeks before the end
of filming. Kidman stressed the romance did not begin till a little
later, but she was seen on Cruise's arm at the 1990 Academy Awards,
and the couple would marry, in a rented house in Telluride, Colorado,
on Christmas Eve that same year.
Suddenly, Kidman was a star, and not simply due to her marriage. The
TV miniseries Bangkok Hilton, wherein she played an inadvertent drug
mule sent to a fabulously unpleasant jail, was hugely impressive, as
was her catty senior school-girl in Flirting (alongside Thandie
Newton, later Cruise's co-star in Mission: Impossible 2). Next she was
the mysterious moll of Dustin Hoffman's Dutch Schultz in Billy
Bathgate, then Cruise's muse and lover, Shannon Christie, in Ron
Howard's epic of Irish exile and redemption, Far And Away.
Now, for those who thought Kidman to be simply Mr Cruise and a very
lucky lady indeed, came two roles which proved her excellence for
good. In Malice, as Tracy Kennsinger, she was fantastically beastly to
Bill Pullman, even having her own body parts removed to work her evil
scam. Then, in To Die For, she was even beastlier to poor Matt Dillon
as she strove to find TV stardom. Her wicked seduction of young
Joaquin Phoenix was masterful, her eventual death at the hands of a
supremely sinister David Cronenberg uniquely disturbing. For this
role, having knocked Meg Ryan out of the picture by calling director
Gus Van Sant direct, she spent three days in a Santa Barbara inn,
watching nothing but trashy TV, then spoke in a full-blown US accent
from the beginning of rehearsals to the end of production. It worked -
she won a Golden Globe for her efforts, having earlier been nominated
for Billy Bathgate.
The roles kept coming. She played Michael Keaton's pregnant wife,
helping him accept onrushing death from cancer in My Life. She was Dr
Chase Meridian, devouring Bruce Wayne in Batman Forever (reports said
she got the role when Val Kilmer stepped into the Bat-shoes for Keaton
and producers felt the original Dr Meridian, Rene Russo, was too old
for him). Then came Campion and Henry James' Portrait Of A Lady, where
Kidman played Isabel Archer, a wealthy woman whose tricked by wicked
Barbara Hershey into marrying the even more wicked John Malkovich. In
the meantime, Kidman took time to enrol at New York's Actor's Studio
to study The Method. Ever conscientious, that Nicole.
For Kidman, the role was extremely stressful, emotionally speaking.
She took six months off then, having been persuaded to join Cruise in
Stanley Kubrick's upcoming Eyes Wide Shut (not that she needed much
persuading), she took the role of Julia Kelly, the nuclear weapons
expert who helps George Clooney track down smuggled nukes in the fast
and furious The Peacemaker. A big deal, this, as it was the movie that
launched Steven Spielberg's DreamWorks. She also managed to squeeze in
the witchy comedy, Practical Magic, with Sandra Bullock. And, once
Eyes Wide Shut's incredibly extended shoot was done, she blew away
theatre audiences in London and on Broadway, with her performances in
The Blue Room, directed by American Beauty's Sam Mendes, where she
briefly appeared naked. Unsurprisingly, the production was a sell-out.
Eyes Wide Shut was a big media event, though many considered it cold
and slow (despite the supposedly red-hot trailer). Kubrick himself
would die soon after, but all seemed well in Camp Cruise. The couple
had adopted two children - daughter Isabella Jane and son Conor Antony
- and Kidman's quote that "I just feel so fortunate that I have found
someone who will put up with me and stay with me" seemed based on a
solid foundation. The lawsuits that flew at any tabloids printing
sordid rumours seemed also to point to the couple's strength and unity
- especially the one against The Star for claiming the Cruises needed
a sex therapist to get through Eyes Wide Shut's more physical scenes.
Yet the marriage wasn't as tight as we all thought, Tom and Nicole
separating in February, 2001, with Cruise quickly taking up with
Penelope Cruz. The couple said very little about it publicly, but her
professional connection to Cruise will be noted for some time to come.
Before their separation, Kidman starred in weirdo thriller The Others,
directed by Alejandro Amenabar (writer of Cruise's forthcoming Vanilla
Sky) and co-produced by Cruise himself. The film - slow, surreal and
deadly quiet - was an object lesson in how to build tension, with the
whole thing being held together by Kidman's extraordinary performance
as a fraught young mother living with her kids in a seemingly haunted
country mansion while her husband is away at war. It was utterly
terrifying, the best horror movie in years, though the greatest
mystery surrounding it must be why Kidman, nominated for a Golden
Globe, was not similarly forwarded for an Oscar.
She found consolation in an Oscar nod (and Golden Globe win) for Baz
Luhrmann's Moulin Rouge, filmed earlier, wherein she played beautiful
courtesan Satine, plaguing poor poet Ewan McGregor as well as much of
aristocratic society. We see Kidman sing (she'd also have a Christmas
Number One duetting with Robbie Williams on Something Stupid) and,
utilising the training she began 31 years ago, dance. Indeed, so
frenetic were the dance sequences that she at one point badly hurt her
knee, delaying production. Moving on to The Others without giving the
injury time to heal, it flared up again, forcing her to withdraw from
David Fincher's The Panic Room after two weeks (though she would
provide a disembodied voice on the phone to Jodie Foster). Next would
be Birthday Girl, where Nicole played Nadia, the Russian mail-order
bride of shy Brit bank clerk Ben Chaplin (how does this guy GET these
peachy roles?). Speaking different languages, they nevertheless begin
to fall for one another - then some thoroughly dodgy Russian types
turn up, claiming to be Nadia's relatives.
After that came The Hours, placing her in what must now be seen as
appropriate company. Co-starring with Meryl Streep and Julianne Moore,
she was up there amongst the finest screen actresses alive. The film
was set in three separate times and examined the writing and effects
of Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway, Kidman playing Woolf herself,
struggling in a lifeless marriage, growing ever more distant from her
family and friends, and finally discovering a dreamt-for freedom in
suicide. Radically altering her appearance with a prosthetic nose, she
still managed to convey (mostly with her eyes) the flashes of
frustration, indignation and love that kept this highly sensitive
depressive going as long as she did. A tremendous performance,
deserving of the Oscar and Golden Globe she now won.
Nicole claimed that, throughout her marriage to Cruise, she'd been
playing a supporting role, pushing his career before hers. And it's
clearly true that she was hardly prolific during that time. Now
divorced (and having suffered a miscarriage just a month after the
initial separation) she set about changing this. Having turned down
Jane Campion's visceral In The Cut, which arrived too soon after the
Cruise trauma (Nicole would remain with the project as executive
producer), 2003 would see her in three productions, beginning with
Lars Von Trier's Dogville. This was a real oddity, with many of the
sets and props shown only as lines on the ground. Kidman would play a
young woman on the run from the Mob during the Depression, who's
discovered by kindly Paul Bettany and, through his persuasion, a whole
Rocky Mountain village decides to harbour her. The price she pays for
safety, though, is hard labour and gross humiliation, for which she
will eventually seek revenge upon the townsfolk. She'd move on to The
Human Stain, adapted from the Philip Roth novel, where Anthony Hopkins
played a college professor who, accused of racism, resigns in order to
safeguard a painful secret. As the film discusses divisions in race
and class, he now embarks on an affair with Nicole, a semi-literate
janitor with a wife-beating ex-husband (Ed Harris, one of Kidman's
co-stars in The Hours).
|